13 Royalty-Free Audio Tracks for "Dha"

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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Dha sound of a tabla stroke.
Author: Subodh
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Kampitham on the note "dha" played on flute.
Author: Mrageshrajan
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Snippets from recordings of me playing the tanpura. Tuned to e flat, the notes from top to bottom are b flat, e flat, c, low e flat. In traditional indian tuning the root note in the scale is referred to as sa and is e flat in this scale the fifth note (b flat in this scale) is referred to as pa and the sixth note (c) is dha. I noticed that my first pack of tanpura samples has a bit of fuzzy white noise so in this pack i have equalized - i reduced all the very high frequencies which got rid of most of the white noise without affecting the low frequency sounds of the tanpura itself. Please note this is the tanpura part of an instrument called the swar sangam which combines the swarmandal (indian harp) and the tanpura, it is not a traditional tanpura and does sound slightly different.
Author: Luckylittleraven
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Snippets from recordings of me playing the tanpura. Tuned to c sharp, the notes from top to bottom are g sharp, a sharp, c sharp, low c sharp. In traditional indian tuning the c sharp is the root note (first note in the scale) and referred to as sa. The fifth note (g sharp in this scale) is referred to as pa and the sixth note (a sharp) is dha. The pack contains recordings of the more traditional pa-sa-sa-sa type rythmns, as well as some experimenting with short bass lines, riffs and slap bass drones!. Before you say "a tanpura should not be played in such a way" please be comforted by the fact that this is not a traditional tanpura (and will never sound or be able to be played exactly like a traditional tanpura) it is part of the swar sangam, which combines the four drone strings of the tanpura with 15 harp strings. I am only playing the tanpura part in these recordings.
Author: Luckylittleraven
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